4 Reasons Companies from BP America to Unilever are Thanking Rep. Curbelo for Leadership on Climate

For the first time since 2010, a Republican has introduced a climate bill. Business leaders are welcoming its market-based approach to fighting climate change.
Aug 3, 2018 2:55 PM ET

This blog originally posted on EDF+Business

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Yesterday, 34 U.S. businesses sent a public letter thanking Rep. Carlos Curbelo (R-FL 26thDistrict) for introducing the MARKET CHOICE Act (H.R. 6463), a bill to fund infrastructure investment while cutting climate pollution. Companies that signed the letter include BP America, Campbell Soup Company, The Dow Chemical Company, DuPont, General Motors, Ingersoll Rand, Lyft, Inc., IKEA North America Services, LLC, National Grid, PG&E Corporation and Shell. The Sustainable Food Policy Alliance, which includes Danone, Mars, Nestle USA and Unilever also sent its own letter of support.

Why are these companies publicly thanking Rep. Curbelo and his cosponsors? Here are four takeaways for companies of all sizes.

1. Companies recognize that the MARKET CHOICE Act is a big deal.

Businesses are way ahead of Washington, D.C. when it comes to addressing climate change, which has regrettably become a partisan issue that Congress hasn’t touched in years. However, the MARKET CHOICE Act could begin to change that. For the first time since 2010, a Republican has introduced a climate bill, and restarted a conversation in Congress about climate change that is long overdue. As the companies state in their letter, “this issue impacts our employees, our customers and the communities that we serve regardless of political affiliation – and of course, it impacts our businesses in very direct ways.”

Whether or not this bill passes the House or even comes to a vote, its introduction is a significant step forward in building momentum for climate action in Congress.

2. Companies want market-based solutions to climate change.

The letter points out that the most effective way to fight climate change is to harness market forces to drive down emissions: “We believe that an economy-wide, market-based approach to valuing or pricing carbon, when carefully crafted, can both strengthen our economy and reduce carbon emissions by encouraging technological innovation and stimulating new investments in infrastructure, products and services.” The companies also highlight that a market-based approach “provides much-needed certainty to aid us in making long-term investment decisions that can further mitigate climate-related risks.”

While the companies aren’t endorsing this specific bill, they commend Rep. Curbelo for using a market-based approach and make the key point that “valuing or pricing carbon and strengthening our economy are not mutually exclusive – something we, as businesses, have understood for many years.”

Lawmakers who voted yes on the Scalise resolution – which denounces carbon taxes as “detrimental to the economy” – listen to what these businesses have to say.

3. These companies know that their influence matters.

Businesses know that any lasting and effective solution to climate change will require bipartisan support, and that they have a critical role to play in securing that support. By publicly commending lawmakers who introduce climate bills, companies can create the political space for others – on both sides of the aisle – to do the same. Moreover, as key stakeholders in climate and energy policies, businesses can’t afford to stay on the sidelines. They know their sustained engagement is critical in advancing, improving and ultimately passing legislation that achieves the winning combination of driving down greenhouse gas emissions and improving our economy. Business influence is a vast and largely untapped resource in moving climate legislation forward: we need many more companies to get involved.

4. Their stakeholders expect nothing less.

Finally, these companies recognize that while their voluntary actions to cut carbon emissions are important, leadership requires constructive engagement in public policy. Publicly supporting proposals to price carbon shows customers, employees and investors that you are walking the talk on sustainability, and aligning your public rhetoric with your policy advocacy. It should be a no-brainer for the more than 430 companies that have set science-based targets to cut their emissions, the nearly 140 have committed to be powered 100 percent by renewable energy or the nearly 2,000 businesses and investors that have signed on to We Are Still In.

EDF joins these leading businesses in commending Rep. Curbelo for introducing his innovative proposal. Now is the time for companies across the U.S. to do the same.

This was originally posted on Forbes.

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